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Go to IMDb and look up Judge Reinhold. Billy Dee Williams' character is called Judge Reinhold. And the boys make fun of him by working the titles of Judge Reinhold movies into the conversation. He is NOT amused.
Deb
I only have a few pages so far Anne, but I'm sure we can all get a copy of it down the road, whenever we're ready to read it. You might not understand the scene I just read. You'd have to be a pretty big geek for American movies to get the joke. But it IS funny.
Deb
Judge Reinhold. Heh. So far, this is a really clever script.
Deb
So you'd better start posting a lot to graduate to the next less humiliating level. Got the pages. Breaking for lunch now so I'll give them a read. Thanks!
Deb
Shrams, where were you getting sides and do you still have them? If you do, I NEED to see them. I want to eventually read all the JoA scripts in their entirety, but so far, I've only read Jump and The Gift. I think the place we got those had two others but they weren't heav A/J eps so we just picked up those two. It fascinates me to no end to see what was left out and what was made up on the set.
Deb
Shrams, great recap. Irina and I were just discussing Friday NIght recently and it prompted me to pull over my thoughts from the old MB at Melissa's site. Since you probably haven't gotten over to that thread, I'll re-post my feelings about the ep here, because I was also blown away when I finally got to really watch it...
Good God, y'all.
OK, first of all, getting the DVD ROM to work was an all day ordeal. My computer started acting weird after we got it in and when I got home, I discovered that Firefox got scrambled somehow and wouldn't work so I had to use IE to relinstall it and reboot twice to get the DLL error that mysteriouly appeared to go away.
And then, I downloaded the codec for DivX only to discover that they no longer support WinME and it wasn't going to work. I somehow remembered that some sites offer free downloads of older versions of stuff so I Googled and found one and finally had the Power DVD (which is also giving me an error, but still working) up and playing in beautiful full screen on my 17" monitor. Cool enough, but I need better speakers. It sounds clean but I can't get enough volume. I just have these tiny, crappy $10 speakers. I'll find something better.
And now, with all that boring stuff aside, I'll tell you that I have been longing to see the scene from Friday Night on the date in the restaurant just to see Adam say, "You look so pretty, Jane." The way he says that, the expression on his face just melts me every single time. Now, I could've watched the clip. I've got in onfile from j-a.org. But that's not what I wanted.
You see, I missed this episode when it first aired because I was in LA with my former writing partner at a screenwriting conference. We didn't get back to the hotel room in time. I don't know why I didn't get it on tape back home. I had my buddy Dave taping my shows while dogsitting for me. The next weekend, Pete and I were in tiny Safford, Arizona, trying to see the Pope Scope on a research trip for a sci-fi story we wanted to write. I did get back to the motel in time to see No Future. And I was completely shocked because I had no idea Judith died. And I just remember I waited and waited for them to say what happened and they danced around it in the dialog for a little bit, which annoyed me.
Later in the season, Friday Night was repeated and I don't know why I didn't get it on tape that time either, except that my J/A ship thing and my Chris crush didn't blow up into an obsession until T&E. So I don't have many eps on tape. I'm sure the first time I saw Firday Night, I was affected. But it was also post T&E and before we knew for sure if we were losing the show. I'm not sure I paid close attention. Because this episode is one of those perfect gems that you maybe get only once or twice a season.
I'm a big fan of seeing things in context, watching episodes in order for maximum impact. But I know this show so intimately that I don't think it's completely necessary anymore. So I don't feel too weird that I chose Friday Night as the very first ep I would watch from my S2 set.
What does feel weird is that I've been trying to keep myself in a good mood for a while. Right now, TeeJay and I are working on a rather fluffy/angsty/sweet/sexy/hopeful JOA fic series that just makes me giddy. I am trying so hard to stay inside the bubble I've been calling happyland that it is very weird that I would want to watch Friday Night.
It's dark and painful and we lose a character. But it's also tightly written, incredibly emotionally impactful and prefectly acted by every single cast member. I love that there is no cop plot at all, except as it surrounds Judith. There is nothing in this episode that feels wasted to me. I cannot fast forward through a second of it. There are so many incredible moments that I could spend the next hour describing them. And you guys don't need that because I know that you've watched the ep repeatedly yourselves. What I do wanna say is that I feel like I saw it for the very first time tonight. And it feels like the Jump of S2 to me somehow.
As for Adam, I know you guys hate that he left Joan at the hospital on her own. I'm not fond of it myself. But I don't think it foreshadowed their split. I just think that Adam honestly gets wigged out by things sometimes and it overwhelms him. I believe that he couldn't take being there, seeing Judith in that state, knowing she put herself in harm's way to score drugs.
Now, admittedly, it's a little self-indulgent to put those feelings over your girlfriend's need for your support in a terrible time. So he's not perfect. He's just a kid, really, and he is kind of used to wallowing in his misery and hiding from things. After his mom died, he never again had anyone to help him through stuff until Joan.
In this case, his feelings are completely shoved aside. But that's not really Joan's fault. She can't be expected to deal with her friend lying there with her internal organs all swiss cheesed and be sensitve to his pathologies too. Can she?
There's just so much going on in this ep. And all of it is heartbreaking. Not the least of which is seeing Joan and Adam have their perfect date while Judith is freakishly, fatally injured. Harsh. Man, these characters are really put through hell in this ep, aren't they?
I've always been grateful that TPTB didn't decide to take a comedic approach to the date and have something ridiculous and embarrassing happen to Joan. I mean they planted the seed with that story from Helen. Thankfully, what we got instead was a sweetly dignified affair that both of them loved, until events took a dreadful turn.
As for Chris, I like the long hair, this we know. And the hoodies. I even like the toques. The slicked back look didn't work for me in The Gift. I have to overlook it during that incredible scene in the hotel in that ep. But here, I actually thought it worked. Maybe because it was fuller and thicker so you can't really stick it all down. I thought he was just gorgeous on the date. The eyebrows were working overtime, TeeJay! Loved that suit with the fancy cuffs and links and all. He was completely drool-worthy.
So, Deb's rating for the ep:
4 hankies out of 5
For the drool-worthiness of Chris:
4 DDTs out of 5
Deb
PS: TeeJay, I got no writing done tonight because of the computer issues and my determination to see at least one ep. And I can't stay up till after 1am again.
I did reread Grave Admissions and I think it's ready to go except for one question, when did Joan take her pants off so that she would feel the jeans on the backs of her legs? Or is she wearing shorts on the couch? If so, you need to say that. It's going to throw people.
And I posted this question publicly as a tease. I'm sure that a few of our fellow Dorquettes and A/J shippers are sitting there wondering right now how that above paragraph plays out.
wink
TJ TeeJay
Moderator
Posts: 376
(4/12/06 12:46 am)
Reply Re: Friday Night First of all, I'm really glad you managed to get the DVD ROM working and to play the JoA episodes. Have you checked out the other goodies I put on there? smile I hope POS will behave now. He has to, you depend on him! And I hope you can get better speakers as well. Have you tried fiddling with the built-in Windows volume setting? You know, when you double-click the little speaker symbol in the system tray. I sometimes find that even though the Volume Control is set to maximum, the Wave control isn't. And I kinda have a spare set of speakers too. But with a German plug and 220 V technology. Don't think that's any use to you. I think you can get decent speakers with a separate volume control for not much more than $10 - $15, though. Mine couldn't have been much more expensive (I got them from a friend for free a while back).
I'm so glad you got to see Friday Night. To be quite honest, this episode didn't strike me as all that special in s2. Maybe I need to have another look, I don't think I watched it more than two or three times. At least not the whole thing. And I can't even say why, because I didn't think it was a bad episode. But I sure can say that for me it's not the Jump of the second season. It probably also has to do with the slicked back look. I didn't like it in The Gift and I didn't like it in Friday Night. I like his hair wavy and natural. At least when it's long. I don't mind a bit of gel to make it more messy or a little spiky when it's short. Truth be told, I don't like the hair in the SM Gunshot Wedding pic either. God, I'm so fussy about these things, aren't I? So shoot me. I don't even have a right to be, it's silly. But we're the Dorquettes, so I guess it's part of the deal.
Oooh, the eyebrows are working overtime? Man, I gotta rewatch this episode. I'll put that on the agenda for tonight then. After sports. Nice incentive to strech out on the couch and get immersed in happyland-JoA. Okay, bittersweet happyland.
Deb, don't worry about not getting any writing done. Watching JoA is much more important. I'll comment on the thighs issue in a separate e-mail. I thought I had explained this earlier in the story... I'll have another look when I'm home.
-TeeJay
Edited by: TJ TeeJay at: 4/12/06 12:47 am
TJ TeeJay
Moderator
Posts: 379
(4/12/06 1:55 pm)
Reply Re: Friday Night I just rewatched this one with Lars. And I still can't say it's my Jump of s2. I did like it, there were some incredibly thoughtful and some incredibly sad moments. I almost cried again at the end (which is not always an indicator of quality, though--I cry over the silliest, kitschiest stuff).
I agree that this episode had so many good moments, I also didn't feel like wanting to fast forward through anything. What I didn't like was that one comedic line they wrote for Adam. When the waiter asks him how he'd like his steak prepared and he says, "In a pan." Come on! It made him look stupid. I think even Adam can be expected to know that you can have rare or medium-rare or well-done steaks. Granted, it made me smile the first time, but now it kinda annoys me. But maybe that's just me being too over-protective of him. I think I've written too many fanfics....
And just to confirm, I don't like the slicked-back look. Not in The Gift and not in Friday Night. The suit was... well... nice, but I kinda prefer the casual look. Natural is comfortable. Indeed, even for Adam. Or should I say: especially for Adam?
And I still have issues with Adam just leaving the hospital, especially after accusing Judith so openly. Wasn't he aware that it might be the last thing he'd ever say to her? Yes, I am trying to understand that what he said to Joan in the end, about not being able to watch another life being thrown away, and I do understand a part of that. Maybe I'm too much trying to root for Joan in this episode. I guess you're right with saying that Adam is too used to wallowing in his own grief, being left alone with his problems. In the end we all go back to what we're used to, don't we?
And watching that last scene there on the Girardi's front porch hit a little close to home for me. That was kinda like what we were the night we heard Carsten died. We didn't camp out on any front porch, but his best friends met at Thorsten's place, just trying to take comfort in each other's presence. And it helped. I didn't feel quite so bad after I got home that night. It was a horrible day for all of us, but it really helps to know you have friends you can rely on, who will help you through tough times when you need them.
I'm still saddened when I think about Carsten, but it doesn't quite hurt that much anymore.
Okay, guys, we need to stop talking about all these depressing things. I wanna go back to happyland too. Maybe I should read the last two chapters again, huh, Deb? wink
-TeeJay
germanjoan
Moderator
Posts: 296
(4/12/06 2:14 pm)
Reply Re: Friday Night That pan thing made me laugh the first time I saw it but now ... I don't know, I think it's kina lame. I have to agree with TeeJay, it makes him look stupid. Even a sixteen year-old should be able to know what that question means.
Well, maybe he was supposed to be nervous because that was the first "real" date they had. We'll never know.
Quote:
And I still have issues with Adam just leaving the hospital, especially after accusing Judith so openly. Wasn't he aware that it might be the last thing he'd ever say to her?
Oh yeah, me too. First time I saw it, I was soooo mad at him! But now, after rewatching it several times, I can agree here:
Quote:I guess you're right with saying that Adam is too used to wallowing in his own grief, being left alone with his problems.
(My English doesn't work right today, sorry.)
LuzGrrrl
Member
Posts: 350
(4/12/06 4:01 pm)
Reply Re: Friday Night For the record, "In a pan" doesn't bother me as much as Joan saying "Awesome ordering" in response to it. Uh, what was so awesome about it? I think they were both just too cutesy in that specific moment. But then I don't remember ever going to a restaurant that fancy on a date at 16-17, whatever they're supposed to be mid-S2.
Yes, what Adam said to Judith was harsh. But do you think really thought she'd die? Most kids think of themselves and their peers as invincible. Maybe it didn't occur to him that it might be the last thing he'd ever say to her.
Also, I forgot to mention that I love how Joan shoves him when he turns up at the house. A slap would've been too much. That childish, but painful-looking shove was just perfect.
I'm sorry, I do like the cleaned-up Adam here. I can't really explain it. I'm not into suits at all. And I love him all skater-dude like. But he just looks so damned elegant.
And I cried like a baby at the end. I mean, I was sobbing last night. It hit me really hard. I guess I was just in the right mood.
Deb
TJ TeeJay
Moderator
Posts: 383
(4/13/06 12:39 am)
Reply Re: Friday Night Okay, I think I got annoyed over the "In a pan" line that I didn't even really notice the "Awesome ordering" line of Joan's. Yeah, now that you say it, it's not such a great line either. Don't like either.
You're right again, Adam probably never thought about that it might be the last thing he'd ever say to Judith. And I'm sure he felt bad about it afterwards, after she died. Hey! This is gapper material! Maybe someone could write a quick, little fic about him talking to Joan about it?
Yes, I love the shoving scene too. In fact, as sad as it is, I the last scene of that ep is what I like best about the whole episode. It's one of the few times we see Grace actually crying. And Friedman was so heart-breakingly devastated. Great acting, by all of them. The shoving scene was what probably inspired me for a scene I wrote in "Old Wounds", plus something Anne and I talked about over Yahoo Messenger a while ago.
You know what I realized last night when I had a quick look at some Chris pics on my hard drive? I said I don't like the slicked-back suit look, right? I may retract that statement for those daydream scenes from Romancing The Joan. The scenes where they are at the gallery and it's first Joan and Adam married and then, later, Stevie and Adam married. I really dig the suit look in those. Maybe it's the red tie, I don't know. I can't explain it.
-TeeJay
No, in fact, you can delete this thread. It ain't him. No way.
Deb
Yeah, I can see him frantically posting, trying to graduate to the next level after that. Heehee.
Deb
Well, you'll always be a cute lil horndog to us. As for what's next, post and see...
Deb
Hey Sean,
Just two more posts and you graduate from the lowest posting rank. Go boy!
Deb
Congratulations Shrams! You are the first poster here to graduate from Cute 'Lil Horndog to Fangirl! Way to go. You win a cookie.
Deb
They don't tale long to read, TeeJay, maybe 3-5 minutes each. And they're worth it! Good luck on your interview Shrams. I hope you have time to enjoy all the stuff that TeeJay has painstakingly collected here very soon. She busted her butt on this site and it's just chock full of treasures because of her dedication.
Deb
Yeah, I just love the totally blunt, matter-of-fact way you put it.
Deb
Great stuff, Shrams.
This made me giggle with joy because of our fic, Butterflies...
Adam: For doing something I love! It's...I just...I just need to give you a hug. (The world's best hug ensues, as Helen looks on in fondness at her daughter and future son-in-law.)
The next one made me giggle, period. Because, well, that last sentence is damn funny...
Anyway, seeing his mom and hearing her voice devastates Adam, especially when she asks him to kiss the camera, and he does. That's when 17-year-old Adam turns to Joan and cries on her bosom.
Deb
I wanted to like Final Destination because it was a Morgan and Wong movie and Kristen Cloke was in it. I saw it all the way through once and sometimes, I'll watch it on cable till KC's character, Val Lewton dies. I also enjoyed listening to the goofy DVD commentary by the actors, including KC. Other than that, I had the problem of not caring for the characters and feeling depressed afterward. I hate that. Why the hell should I subject myself to shock and depression on purpose? As for the second one, couldn't give a crap since Morgan and Wong didn't do it. I wouldn't mind seeing the third one some time though because Morgan and Wong are back and a little Ryan Merriman never hurt anything.
Speaking of Morgan and Wong, I really enjoyed their take on one of the classic horror movies of my youth, Willard. It was respectful of the original, and yet weird as hell and dead funny. And the making-of documentary that featured a very pregnant KC was utterly priceless. I gained all new respect for Crispin Glover. His music video for the song, "Ben" was so nutty.
What Z-grade horror movie was your novel based on? I might know it with my history watching that stuff.
Deb
Ooh, is there any way you can edit that and fix the formatting, Shrams? I'm afraid my eyeballs will explode if I try to read it as it is.
Deb
Looks pretty decent on my home PC with Firefox. At work on IE, with the huge resolution, it looks kinda bad. But it is much easier on the eye.
Deb
Yep, you got it Anne. The world is twisted enough.
You know, there was a time when I was fascinated with vampires and serial killers and I read all these true crime books and watched all ultra-violent these movies. Then, one day, about 11 years ago, something in my head just clicked and I realized that I was becoming very down and depressed and angry at everyone. And it became very clear to me that a HUGE part of that was this really dark stuff I had been feeding my head. I just couldn't do it anymore. I packed away all the serial killer books and a lot of the vampire stuff too --- though the Anne Rice books remain on my shelf to this day because there's so much more to them than horror. And ever since, I've kind of stayed away from really dark, unltra-violent type stuff. Gotta say, I've been a whole lot happier since I started feeding my head more positive things.
I'd like to keep it that way.
Deb
Looks great on the page and I think it rocks.
Deb
OK, will do.
Deb
What bothers me about the Saw movies and Hostel and all these new wave type horror movies isn't the gore onscreen. It's the depravity behind the whole concept. It's like those old Spanish horror movies of the late 70's and early 80's. They're just vile. Shrams said something about "torture" and I guess that's what really, really turns me off. 90 minutes of watching people get tortured. No thanks. We see enough of that in the real world these day. And I just don't find it entertaining at all.
Yes, The Sixth Sense is a horror movie, it's a psychological horror movie, just like the other two I meantioned. Another favorite of mine is the musty old 70's flick, The Legend Of Hell House. I just love being creeped out without being grossed out. And it's nice to have at least one character I actually care about to root for.
Crap like Freddy Vs Jason, to me that's like a very bad cartoon. It's not scary because it's just mind-numbing scene after mind-numbing scene of people I couldn't give a rat's ass about getting mangled. Whatever. And that one was worst of all because it was two hours of watching unkillable monsters try to kill each other. Hello, hidesously boring, much?
Deb
They'll do.
Deb
See to me, a movie like Saw is violence against movie-goers and I have a problem with being assaulted at the movies. I like my horror a little more cerebral, I guess. Might explain why my favorites are things like The Silence Of The Lambs, The Sixth Sense and The Changeling (which I hear they are remaking). Oh well, to each his or her own bucket of gore, I guess.
Deb
Well, at least it's way better than a Saw movie. ![]()
Deb
Those are awesome! So much fun to read. More please. ![]()
Deb